PISHILL
The modern parish of Pishill with Stonor was first
formed in 1922 and was augmented in 1931 by the
addition of Warmscombe (278 a.), hitherto a detached part of Watlington, and so came to cover
2,890 acres. (fn. 1) Before that date Pishill had been a
small independent parish, comprising 793 acres, (fn. 2)
since at least the 12th century. The northern and
western boundary of both the ancient and modern
parish are identical. The line follows Pishill Bottom
and Patemore Lane to Howe Hill, it goes south by
Red Lane and then east to Russell's Water, and from
thence it descends by the ancient 'Green Way' to
Maidensgrove and the 'Five Horse Shoes' (fn. 3) as far as
Lodge Farm. At Lodge Farm the ancient boundary
turned abruptly north, leaving Warmscombe to the
south, and followed a zigzag course northwards with
Stonor on the other side of the boundary. Stonor is
now included in the new parish so that the county
boundary, once the boundary of the ancient parish
of Pyrton to which Stonor belonged, now forms the
eastern boundary of Pishill. Pishill's western boundary today continues southwards from Lodge Farm
following Warmscombe Lane to join the Stonor
to Henley road. This would seem to be a reversion to
the Anglo-Saxon boundaries of an estate granted to
Worcester by King Offa, supposedly in 774, and preserved in a charter forged in the late 10th century. (fn. 4)
The account of these boundaries includes Grenanweg
and Stanoranlege. This last is very possibly an allusion to old Stonor Park which until the 18th century
lay immediately south of Maiden's Grove and Doyley
Wood in Pishill. (fn. 5)
Before the formation of the parish of Pishill, which
apparently took place soon after the Domesday survey, Pishill's land seems to have been divided between Pyrton and Watlington, and it is likely that the
two manorial estates of the 13th-century parish preserved the old division, Pishill Venables being the
part that was included in the grant to Worcester and
the D'Oilly manor being the part that was included
in Watlington in 1086. (fn. 6)
The whole of the ancient parish which alone is the
subject of this article is on the chalk hills of the
Chilterns and is largely covered in beech woods
with a little pasture between the woods. There is
cultivated land in the centre round Nutall Farm.
The south-west edge of the parish runs along a spur
of the Chilterns which gradually descends from 650
feet at Russell's Water to about 615 feet at Maidensgrove. (fn. 7) Here is open common and the road commands magnificent views over Bix Bottom towards
the Thames. This road is the Grenanweg mentioned
above, and besides being the parish boundary was
once the boundary line between Pyrton and Ewelme
hundreds. (fn. 8)
The north-eastern side of the parish reaches about
700 feet. The road from Watlington to Stonor descends to 370 feet at Pishill village, which lies almost
on the boundary line with the old parish of Pyrton.
The chief Woods are Doyley Wood, named after the
D'Oilly family which held the manor in the Middle
Ages, Pishillbury Wood, and Long Wood.
Pishill village lies in an isolated wooded valley
which ascends from Stonor to the heights above
Watlington. (fn. 9) The nearest railway station is at
Watlington, 5 miles away.
The Crown Inn, Pishill Farm, and Bank Farm are
on this road and the mid-19th-century school (now
closed) and some cottages, while the church lies
on the hillside overlooking the village. The 19thcentury Rectory (now a private house) stands above
it on the crest of the hill. The modern hamlet is to be
identified with Pishill Napper, one of the parish's
two hamlets that are recorded in the hundredal survey of 1279, for the lord of this hamlet was once also
patron of the church. Behind the modern Rectory are
the remains of a medieval flint building with a 13thcentury transomed window of two lights. Within there
is a splayed sill with window seats, which shows that
the building was a domestic one. A door jamb is
visible on the exterior of the south wall. (fn. 10) This
building may have been part of the D'Oilly's manorhouse, of which there is a record in 1406 when a
private chapel there was licensed for divine service. (fn. 11)
In the 18th century more extensive medieval buildings may have been standing, for Rawlinson was
informed that there was 'an Abbot and six monks belonging formerly to the parish' and that the ruins of
the abbey remained. (fn. 12) This erroneous tradition of an
abbey's existence probably originated in the fact
that Dorchester Abbey was given the patronage of
the church and was an extensive landowner in the
parish.
The hamlet of Russell's Water is picturesquely
situated round an open green on a ridge of the
Chilterns. It is likely to be on the site of the 13thcentury hamlet of Pishill Venables, but it is said to
have taken its name from the brick-works once owned
by the Russell family. (fn. 13) The pool of the works and
the old kiln-house of brick, recently converted into a
private house, can still be seen. A Pishill brickmaker
is recorded in 1665 and 1682, and brick-works are
mentioned as still operating in 1854. (fn. 14) The Beehive
Inn, built of plaster, is an older house, probably
dating from the late 17th century. It was originally
three cottages and became an inn at the end of
the 18th century. (fn. 15) Other cottages, Thatcher's for
example, are built of brick and flint, and there is
a row of these with gable porches near an 18thcentury house at the southern end of the Common.
The house was originally a farmhouse, but since
1939 it has been a part of the Kathleen Slesinger
Home for delicate children from London. A residential school has been built opposite. (fn. 16)
Maidensgrove, another hamlet, also lies on a
ridge and overlooks Stonor. Maiden's Grove Farm,
now a private house, dates from the 17th and 18th
centuries. Both brick and flint mixed and plain brick
have been used in its construction. Near the hamlet's
second farmhouse, Lodge Farm, there are a row of
brick-and-flint cottages of one story with attic
dormers, possibly of late-18th-century or early- 19thcentury date, and an older picturesque cottage,
possibly dating from the late 17th century.
The chief interest of this rural and isolated parish
has been its connexion with the well-known Oxfordshire families of D'Oilly and Stonor, and in the
Middle Ages with the Cheshire family of Grelle
which held under the Constables of Chester. In
the later Middle Ages both manors in the parish
belonged to the Stonors.
For a brief period in the early 19th century the
parish had a curate of some eminence, Henry
Gauntlett (1762–1833), a close friend of Rowland
Hill and an important supporter of the evangelical
revival. (fn. 17)
Manors.
PISHILL NAPPER, (fn. 18) the chief estate
in Pishill in 1279, (fn. 19) was probably represented in
Domesday Book by an estate assessed at 3½ hides in
Watlington. (fn. 20) In 1086 this estate, although belonging
to the fief of William Fitz Osbern, Earl of Hereford
(d. 1071), was in the king's hands, because of the
rebellion in 1075 of the earl's son. (fn. 21) It was never
restored to the family, but was attached to Wallingford honor. This was no doubt because the tenant
in 1086 was Robert d'Oilly, lord of Watlington, and
Watlington with many other of his manors was
attached to the honor after his death. (fn. 22)
By the mid-12th century the demesne tenant was
a Stephen of Pishill who gave Pishill church to
Dorchester Abbey some time between 1146 and
1163. (fn. 23) He may have been the same man as the
Stephen Fitz Riulf who was joint tenant with Philip
de Westmordele of a ½-fee of Wallingford honor in
1166. (fn. 24) Philip de Westmordele's successors held a
¼-fee in Wormsley later (fn. 25) and it has been suggested
that Stephen Fitz Riulf's portion was in Pishill. (fn. 26) A
Stephen son of Ralph, perhaps the same man, was
alive in 1195, (fn. 27) but by 1201 Robert Napper (Le
Napier) held Pishill for 1 fee by service of a napkin. (fn. 28)
In 1212 it was explained that he held by right of his
wife, (fn. 29) who may, therefore, have been Stephen of
Pishill's daughter. The fee was said to have been
turned by a royal charter into a tenure by serjeanty,
the tenant being bound to provide a napkin (nappa)
or pay 3s. a year to the Exchequer. (fn. 30) Robert Napper
was still in possession in 1219 (fn. 31) but by 1236 Thomas
Napper had succeeded and was returned in 1240 as
holding 1 carucate in Pishill. (fn. 32) He was still in possession in 1247 (fn. 33) and was presumably the Thomas
Napper, described as the king's sergeant, who was
alive in 1249, (fn. 34) but nothing further is heard of him
or of this family in connexion with Pishill. By 1276
a John d'Oilly held the serjeanty and carucate of
land, (fn. 35) and it is possible that he had acquired the
property through marriage with the Napper family.
In 1279 his brother Robert d'Oilly held the serjeanty
and 2/3-carucate and paid John d'Oilly's daughter
Eva 21s. a year for half the estate and all services. (fn. 36)
In 1284 Eva and her husband quitclaimed half the
rent due from Pishill to Robert d'Oilly and his wife
Christiana, (fn. 37) and probably gave up all rights in the
estate about this time. Robert d'Oilly held the
serjeanty in 1285, (fn. 38) but the date of his death is
unknown. Richard d'Oilly, said to be Robert's son, (fn. 39)
presumably succeeded his father, and he may have
been the Richard d'Oilly who was a juror of Bixbrand
in 1341. (fn. 40) He was still alive in 1357. (fn. 41) His son
Thomas, who bought Ewden in Hambleden (Bucks.)
which later became the family seat, (fn. 42) succeeded and
was holding in chief on his death in 1384. (fn. 43) Thomas's
son William seems to have settled Pishill as dower
upon his mother Alice, for in 1406 she received
licence to have divine service in her chapel at Pishill. (fn. 44) William apparently lived first at Hinton near
Brackley (Northants.) and later at Ewden, (fn. 45) but in
1420 he was described as 'of co. Bucks, Esq., alias
William Doille of Picell, co. Oxford', and in 1423 he
was still in possession. (fn. 46) On his death in 1424 his
heir was his second son Richard (d. 1435), who was
succeeded by a son William (d. 1449) and a grandson
John (d. 1492), (fn. 47) but whether they in fact held Pishill
is not known. Some time before 1474 a Geoffrey
d'Oilly (Doyley), whose exact connexion with the
family has not been traced, sold Pishill manor to 'my
cossyen Thomas Stonar'. (fn. 48) This sale may have been
connected with the negotiations by which Thomas
Stonor sold Greenlands manor in Hambleden to the
D'Oillys (Doyleys) (fn. 49) and thus enabled both families
to consolidate their estates. From this time until the
present day Pishill Napper has followed the descent
of Stonor and the other Pishill manor which the
Stonors acquired in 1335, although it was several
centuries before the two Pishill manors came to lose
their separate identities. (fn. 50)
A second Domesday estate in Pishill, called PISHILL VENABLES in 1285, (fn. 51) must have been included in 1086 in the 40 hides of Pyrton, (fn. 52) for it was
one of the later dependent manors of Pyrton, owing
suit at the manor court. (fn. 53) It counted as one of the 4½
fees for which Pyrton manor was held and the overlordship and mesne tenure were that of Pyrton
manor, being held by the Grelles and their successors under the Earldom of Chester. (fn. 54) Pishill
Venables was closely connected with Stonor which
it adjoined, being owned by the Stonors from the
14th century, and this no doubt accounts for the
absence of its name from the court rolls of Pyrton
manor. Instead, Stonor occurs as being held for 1
knight's fee, (fn. 55) although it was not previously held as
although it was not previously held as
such. (fn. 56) It is likely that the Stonors did homage for
both Pishill and Stonor and that the fee was, in
reality, owed for Pishill. In the early 16th century
Pishill Venables was said to be 'now known and
called the manor of Stonor'. (fn. 57)
From the 12th century, at least, this Pishill manor
was held by under-tenants. The Venables who gave
the manor its name left no other trace of their tenure,
but it is likely that they were a Lanchashire or
Cheshire family connected with the overlords or
with the later under-tenants who also held land in
Cheshire. (fn. 58) It is significant that a Roger Venables
witnessed a grant in Cheshire (fn. 59) to Adam de Dutton
of Warburton Dutton (Ches.), a tenant of the constables of Chester, (fn. 60) and who seems to have been an
under-tenant of the manor. The Duttons certainly
held Pishill under the Grelles in 1279. It is not clear
when this under-tenancy was created, but it seems
likely that it was in existence at the end of the 12th
century when Adam de Dutton married a daughter
of Roger Fitz Alured of Cumbray, from whom he
obtained Warburton. (fn. 61) Fitz Alured (fl. 1163), the
12th-century tenant of Shirburn, (fn. 62) was demesne
tenant of Pishill and was also a dependent of the constables of Chester. (fn. 63) His son Ralph Fitz Roger held
Pishill property and granted dower there to his
mother Maud de Frodsham in 1204, but reserved
his demesne land. (fn. 64) The property, however, both in
Pishill and Shirburn descended to his sister's heirs,
the Duttons. (fn. 65) Adam de Dutton, who became seneschal of the constable, died towards the end of
John's reign and was followed by his son Geoffrey
(d. 1248) and his grandson Geoffrey. (fn. 66) The younger
Geoffrey was still alive in 1275, (fn. 67) but dead by 1279
when 1 fee in Pishill was held of his heirs by Thomas
Salley, (fn. 68) who also held in 1282. (fn. 69) Dutton's heir was
his son, Sir Peter de Dutton, with whom the alternative family name of Warburton first came into use. (fn. 70)
He granted the manor to John Stonor of Stonor, the
Lord Chief Justice, at a yearly rent of 40s. some time
before 1315, when Stonor was granted free warren
there. (fn. 71) In 1335 his son Geoffrey (III) renounced all
claims to the rent. (fn. 72) The descent of Pishill Venables,
therefore, has followed the descent of Stonor up to
the present day (1960). (fn. 73) It was among the lands put
in trust by Ralph Stonor in 1390 and received back
by him in 1393. (fn. 74) From 1420 to 1422 the manor was
leased out, (fn. 75) but in general the Stonors kept the
manor in demesne and after 1474 Pishill Napper as
well. In the 16th century the Pishills were among the
lands disputed by Sir Adrian Fortescue. (fn. 76) Both were
part of the dowry of Lady Cecily Stonor in 1566, (fn. 77)
and in all late Stonor deeds the two Pishills invariably appear together. The family continued to hold
the lordship: in 1960 Major the Hon. Sherman
Stonor, the son of Lord Camoys, was lord of the
manor. (fn. 78)
Agrarian and Social History.
The soil is mainly chalk with some areas of loam and gravel,
and much of it has always been covered with woods
or uncultivated common. The name of Pishill,
meaning 'the hill on which peas grow', suggests that
in Anglo-Saxon times its soil was considered unsuitable for most crops. (fn. 79) The parish consequently can
never have been thickly populated. Nevertheless in
the Middle Ages there were two hamlets, Pishill
Napper and Pishill Venables, which were the centres
of the two manors. No separate survey of the townships was made at the time of Domesday, and
they were probably included in the accounts of
Pyrton and Watlington. (fn. 80) The Pyrton part of Pishill
cannot be distinguished in the Domesday account
from the rest of the Pyrton estate, but there is little
doubt that the land held by Robert under the Earl of
Hereford in Watlington, which was rated at 3½
hides, represents a part of the later Pishill parish.
There was land for 3 ploughs there, which was
worked by 8 villani with 2 bordars and 2 serfs. The
steep rise in value from 40s. to 100s. suggests that
there had recently been much clearing of woodland. (fn. 81)
In the hundredal survey of 1279 the hamlets are
only partially surveyed. Thomas de Salley, lord of
a fee in 'Pishill hamlet' (or Pishill Venables), held
3 hides in demesne, of which 6 acres were woodland.
He had 4 free tenants, one being the Abbot of
Dorchester, who held 3¼ virgates between them. All
owed service at Pyrton for 1 day with 1 man, and
3 owed a money payment in lieu of ploughing-service
for the lord of Pyrton. There is no mention of the
services of villeins of the lord's Pishill demesne. The
Abbot of Dorchester held 1 virgate in demesne and
had 8 tenants of which 3 themselves held of 2 other
tenants. The account is defective, but these tenants
held 15 virgates, 13 acres at least. Four owed services
at Pyrton. (fn. 82)
On the manor of Robert D'Oilly in Pishill Napper
hamlet there were 22/3 virgates in demesne and the
Abbot of Dorchester had 1⅓ virgate. It is of interest
that all this land, which was held of the honor of
Wallingford, was not hidated. Robert had 6 free tenants and the abbot one. Some of them owed rent and
suit, or rent or payments in kind only. Richard
Stonor and three others owed the services of 17 men
for 1 day at the lord's custom in autumn and of 1 man
for washing and shearing the abbot's sheep. (fn. 83) At this
date there were apparently 24 villeins at least in the
hamlets and possibly 8 of the free tenants lived in
Pishill. (fn. 84)
Fourteenth-century tax assessments provide
little information about the relative wealth or population of Pishill as the place does not appear to have
been taxed separately until 1334: one of its manors
may have been taxed with Pyrton and the other with
Watlington. (fn. 85) In 1334 the village was assessed at the
very low figure of 24s. 6d. (fn. 86) In 1377 only 24 adults
were taxed and in 1523 there were no more than 11
contributors to the subsidy. (fn. 87)
There is little evidence for the agricultural history
of the parish: the management of its woods and
fields is closely connected with that of neighbouring
estates in Pyrton and Watlington and since the 15th
century particularly with the Stonor estate at Assendon. (fn. 88) Portions, however, belonged to other manors
such as Minnygrove in Bix and to Shirburn. (fn. 89) The
extent of the 18th-century Stonor estate in Pishill
may be seen on an estate map of 1725: (fn. 90) the family
held a farm leased to William Holand in 1698, which
spread into Pyrton as well, and Pishill farm. (fn. 91) At the
tithe award of 1847, out of 759 acres of tithable land
360 was arable, 250 common, 134 woodland, and 10
meadow. Lord Camoys held 105 acres of wood in
hand and 312 acres of farm land. (fn. 92) As late as 1849
Lord Camoys held seven holdings in the parish of
which one was a large farm of over 312 acres.
The population of Pishill over sixteen years of age
was registered as 54 in 1676. In the 19th century
it rose from 96 in 1801 to 217 in 1871, and then declined to 139 in 1901. The advent of the motor car
reversed the decline and in 1921 the population numbered 147. (fn. 93) Later census figures are uninformative,
since the parish was united with Stonor in 1922.
Church.
Pishill, a vicarage in Aston deanery, was
in Dorchester peculiar until the peculiar jurisdiction
came to an end in the 1840s. (fn. 94) In 1854 the ecclesiastical parish was considerably enlarged by the
addition of the detached portion of Pyrton called
Assendon liberty, containing Stonor Park and the
hamlet of Upper Assendon; of three parts of Watlington, two of which (Warmscombe liberty, and Patemore Field and the Poor Allotment) were detached;
and of a detached portion of Britwell Prior. (fn. 95)
Pishill church was first mentioned in a papal confirmation of a grant to Dorchester Abbey, made
between 1146 and 1163, by Stephen of Pishill, the
lord of Pishill Napper manor. (fn. 96) If, as seems likely,
Pishill Napper was once in the parish of Watlington (fn. 97)
the creation of the parish of Pishill and the building
of its church must surely have taken place before
1129 when Oseney was founded. After that date the
permission of the abbey, the Rector of Watlington,
would have been required and there is no record of
this in the cartulary. (fn. 98) Since the land and tithes belonging to the church were granted with it, as well as a
carucate of Stephen's demesne, appropriation probably followed immediately. A vicarage was never
endowed, and Dorchester kept the rectory until its
dissolution in 1536. (fn. 99)
Immediately after the Reformation the descent of
the rectory is obscure: in 1545, when it was in the
tenure of Roger Hatchman, the Crown granted it to
Roger and Robert Taverner. (fn. 100) By 1615 the rectory,
including the right of presentation, was in the possession of the Stonor family. (fn. 101) Pishill was their
nearest church, and the acquisition of the rectory and
advowson would therefore be desirable. Sir Francis
Stonor settled the rectories of Pishill and Nettlebed
on his eldest son Henry in 1620. (fn. 102)
The Stonors held the property until the early 19th
century, a curious anomaly as the family was a
Roman Catholic one.
From the 13th century Nettlebed, also a chapel of
Dorchester, and Pishill, although separate parishes,
were usually considered as one benefice: in 1537
Pishill hamlet and the rectory of Nettlebed were
rated together; in 1540 Pishill was even called a
chapel of Nettlebed; and in 1718 Rawlinson described it as annexed to Nettlebed. (fn. 103) Nevertheless in
1811 Nettlebed and Pishill were certified as distinct
benefices. (fn. 104) The benefice was a curacy, either perpetual or a donative: in 1718 Rawlinson was told that
it was a donative at, £15 a year, (fn. 105) but on other occasions it was thought to be a perpetual curacy. (fn. 106) Since
the bishop did not institute to the living, there are
few records of presentations, but it seems probable
that before the 19th century the Stonors, in spite of
being Roman Catholics, usually acted as patrons.
Thomas Stonor certainly did in 1681 (fn. 107) and another
Thomas Stonor was planning to do so in 1789, when
he asked Lord Macclesfield if he knew of a suitable
curate. (fn. 108) In 1738, however, the patronage was granted
for twenty years to Benjamin Bathurst (fn. 109) and in the
early 19th century Thomas Stonor considered himself legally unable to appoint, and in 1811 he leased
the right to a Protestant friend. (fn. 110) Apart from the
position under English law, the Roman Catholics
decided at an episcopal assembly in 1810 that it was
unlawful for a Catholic to nominate a Protestant
to a benefice. (fn. 111)
In 1811, owing to the difficulty of finding a minister to serve so poor a living, the legal position of
the benefice came under review. The rectory had
belonged to the Stonors for about 200 years, but a
thorough search of the family papers and the public
records failed to reveal how or from whom it had
been acquired. (fn. 112) It was noted that it had long been
the custom to pay the curate £35 a year, but the
origin of this arrangement could not be found and
therefore its legal validity was uncertain. (fn. 113) Nor was it
certain whether Pishill and Nettlebed, once separate,
were then one or two livings; (fn. 114) and legal opinion was
divided about the laws affecting donatives. (fn. 115)
Stonor was faced with a complex situation. If he
left the churches without a curate for more than six
months, either the official of the peculiar of Dorchester might appoint someone 'who will give me
trouble', or the bishop might excommunicate him
for his failure to appoint. (fn. 116) If he increased the
stipend to £50, which he was not anxious to do, he
feared that he might commit himself for the future; (fn. 117)
and if he had the living augmented by Queen Anne's
Bounty, it would bring it within the bishop's jurisdiction and that might result in interference, 'expense
or inconvenience'. (fn. 118) To Stonor it was 'perfectly
indifferent' who served the churches, but he wanted
to protect his right to the tithes. (fn. 119)
The problem was partly solved in 1814 when
Thomas L. Bennett, who held a rich Lincolnshire
benefice, accepted the living on condition that he
could buy the right of presentation and 20 acres on
which to build a house. (fn. 120) Soon, however, Stonor and
Bennett were hotly quarrelling: the plan of building
the house fell through and Bennett complained about
the smallness of the stipend and Stonor's bad faith
concerning it. Stonor replied that however small the
stipend might be, any claim to have it increased
would be 'resisted'. (fn. 121) Nor could the two parties
agree over the sale of the advowson and negotiations dragged on for years. In 1820, when Bennett
suggested that Stonor give a £300 bonus when he
sold it, Stonor answered that the repugnance he felt
at parting with the patronage had become 'unsurmountable' now that a bonus was asked of him. (fn. 122)
Bennett still had not got it in 1828, when he was
threatening legal action against Stonor if the sale
was not completed. He had offered £50 for it,
'far more than it is worth'. (fn. 123) Soon after this Bennett
became patron, (fn. 124) and in 1853 the advowson was
bought from his heir by the Revd. C. E. RuckKeene of Swyncombe. (fn. 125) Capt. C. E. Ruck-Keene
vested it in trustees in 1919, and in 1955 it
was transferred to the Diocesan Board of Patronage. (fn. 126)
The benefices of Nettlebed and Pishill were
formally separated in 1853. (fn. 127) By 1854, when institutions by the bishop began, Pishill was considered a
perpetual curacy rather than a donative, and in 1868
it became a vicarage. (fn. 128)
In the Middle Ages the rectories of Nettlebed and
Pishill were valued together at 6s. 8d. in 1254, and at
£6 13s. 4d. in 1535. (fn. 129) The lay rectory was not sold
with the patronage in the 19th century, and in 1849,
when the tithes of Pishill were commuted, Lord
Camoys received a rent charge of £47 10s. The 275
acres belonging to the parish were tithe free. (fn. 130)
Lands belonging to the church, and granted with
it to Dorchester, consisted in 1279 of a third of a carucate, (fn. 131) and Pishill church house, mentioned in a 1596
deed, may also have belonged to the rectory. (fn. 132) When
the Stonors got possession of the rectory, it lost its
separate identity and became part of their own
estate. (fn. 133)
In 1526 the curate was receiving £5 6s. 8d. and a
few years later £6 for both Pishill and Nettlebed. (fn. 134)
In 1681 Thomas Stonor allowed the curate the
tithes of Pishill, (fn. 135) but this was not the usual arrangement. Throughout the 18th century, and until about
1820, the Stonors paid the curate £35: £15 for Pishill and £20 for Nettlebed. (fn. 136) In 1824 Pishill was
augmented £1,000 by Queen Anne's Bounty, and in
1831 by £400, half from Queen Anne's Bounty and
half from the Revd. T. L. Bennett. (fn. 137) However, when
Pishill and Nettlebed were separated in 1853, these
augmentations were given to Nettlebed, leaving
Pishill with £20 a year from the lord of the manor,
and a rent charge of £28 from the vicarial tithes of
Assendon, which were transferred from Pyrton to
Pishill when Pishill was enlarged. (fn. 138)
In the later 19th century the patron, the Revd.
C. E. Ruck-Keene, who rebuilt the church, augmented the living by £300, giving also land for a
parsonage and Glebe farm (26 a.). (fn. 139) The Ecclesiastical Commissioners gave matching grants, and
further augmented the living in the 20th century so
that by 1954 it was worth £438. (fn. 140)
The names of the medieval clergy are not known:
Dorchester Abbey may at times have served the
church with its own canons, as it did some of its
other churches, but it more probably hired secular
chaplains. (fn. 141) In 1301 the abbey was given permission
to serve three of its churches, including Pishill and
Nettlebed, because of their poverty, with chaplains
instead of vicars, but this was a confirmation of a
long-established custom. (fn. 142) The shortage of priests
resulting from the Black Death is likely to have been
responsible for the suit of 1356, when Richard
d'Oilly, lord of one Pishill manor, and the parishioners, were trying to force the abbey to supply a
resident priest. (fn. 143) In the later Middle Ages there was
probably one curate for both Pishill and Nettlebed
as there was in the post-Reformation period, when
complaints were made about the lack of services. In
1587, for example, the curate read services at Nettlebed on two Sundays and on the third he read evening prayers at Pishill. (fn. 144) Around 1620 the churchwardens several times presented that there were no
prayers every other Sunday. The parishioners then
went to Bix or Swyncombe, 1½ mile distant. (fn. 145) When
the curate admitted that he said prayers on alternate
Sundays at Pishill and Nettlebed 'the cures being
small and the curate's wages as slender', he was told
that, if he could not serve both cures properly he
must resign one. (fn. 146) Reform followed, for in 1626 it
was certified that Pishill was sufficiently served. (fn. 147)
In the 1680's Pishill had its own curate, but he was
suspended for performing illegal marriages, evidently
with the consent of the churchwardens and the
parish clerk. He was compelled, he said, to do this to
provide necessaries for himself and his family. (fn. 148) In
1799 there was an equally unsatisfactory curate, who
was said to spend many of his Sundays in London,
and the state of the parish can hardly have been good
earlier in the century, for in 1726 there was no
pulpit and in 1749 there was no register as thieves
had burnt all the parish records after robbing the
church. (fn. 149)
The church history of the early 19th century was
unusual. In 1801 Thomas Stonor appointed to the
joint living William Marsh (1775–1864), later to
become well-known as 'millenial Marsh' and an
'impressive' preacher of evangelical doctrines. (fn. 150)
Although Marsh also had a curacy in Reading, he
served his Oxfordshire churches once every three
weeks, spending the Saturday night at Stonor Park,
where he discussed theology with Thomas Stonor
and his Roman Catholic chaplain, and borrowed sermons from the library. (fn. 151) When Marsh could no longer take the services himself, he hired substitutes at
such an obvious financial loss that it was alleged that
he was being subsidized by a dissenting society. (fn. 152)
In 1805 his curate was a Mr. Flockton, described as
a 'ranting, methodistical extempore preacher', who
called himself a gospel preacher. By omitting parts of
the church service and inserting changes, Flockton
was said to have made the church seem like a dissenting meeting-house and caused more harm than
good, 'especially to servants', while the more 'reputable and steady people' were very dissatisfied. (fn. 153)
He was followed by Henry Gauntlett (1762–1833),
another important supporter of the evangelical
revival. (fn. 154)
In 1811, owing to a quarrel between Marsh and
his curate George Scobell, services in both churches
seem virtually to have stopped. Scobell alleged that
he had been abruptly dismissed without thanks or
pay. Marsh, who was considered to have 'shamefully' neglected the parishes, resigned in consequence
and the churchwardens were blamed by the official
of the peculiar for allowing the churches to be left
for so many Sundays without complaining. (fn. 155) As the
living was so poor it was difficult to find a successor:
in 1813 it had been vacant for several months, and in
1814 the wardens were at a loss even to get anyone to
say Sunday services. (fn. 156)
Thomas L. Bennett, who accepted the living in
1814, was of a different type, and Stonor wrote of him
that he was of the 'true sort' and hated 'Methodists
as he does moduses'. (fn. 157) Bennett lived and died (1844)
at Highmoor Hall in Nettlebed, (fn. 158) from whence he
used to ride over to Pishill every Sunday to take the
service. By 1820, however, he was anxious to give up
these wet and 'dangerous' winter rides, and although
he broke his collar-bone in 1822 it was not until 1830
that he hired a separate curate for Pishill. (fn. 159)
In 1854, after the separation of Pishill and Nettlebed and the addition of Assendon to Pishill, it was
decided that a resident clergyman was desirable,
partly in order to counteract the growth of Roman
Catholicism. (fn. 160) At first part of a farmhouse was converted for the vicar's use, but it was so exposed and
so damp in winter that he found it barely habitable,
and accordingly in about 1871 the Vicarage was
built. (fn. 161) Services were regularly held twice on Sundays
and Communion was given monthly; between 1866
and 1878 the number of communicants increased
from 35 to 65 and in both years the congregation,
estimated at 100 in 1866, was said to be decidedly
increasing. Hindrances to church attendance, apart
from 'Romanism' and 'the influence of property',
were beershops (as distinguished from public
houses) and the system of selling beer on the
common. (fn. 162)
From the end of the 19th century the parish was
served by the Revd. G. M. J. Hall, who died at
the age of 97 and is described on his memorial
tablet as vicar and friend of the parish for 58 years.
For most of the time he was assisted by his wife,
who was a devoted church worker and organist,
and by William Rockall, chorister and church
worker. (fn. 163) Not the least of the vicar's merits was the
friendly relations he established with the Stonors.
Soon after his death Julia (née Stonor), Marquise
d'Hautpoul (d. 1950), the friend of George V and
Queen Mary, was buried in Pishill churchyard. (fn. 164)
In 1954 a reduced population and the amalgamation of the livings of Pishill and Bix led to the sale of
the Vicarage and the vicar's removal to Bix. (fn. 165)
Pishill church which is of unknown dedication lies
at the top of a hill overlooking the hamlet. It is a
flint-and-stone building of Norman origin, but was
largely rebuilt in the 19th century. It now comprises a chancel, north transept or chapel, and a
south porch.
It was called in 1819 'a decent rural building with
whitewashed walls', (fn. 166) and in 1850 Parker described
it as a small plain church with Norman walls and a
small round-headed Norman chancel arch. The east
window of the chancel had a two-light window of
'Transition' style and a low side window; the 'Stonor'
north aisle was originally Norman Transition work,
but had been much modernized. There was a
stone bench-table along the walls of the nave. (fn. 167)
The Stonors, although Roman Catholics, were the
patrons and Roman Catholics were occasionally
buried in this aisle. Rawlinson noted that the
pavement of it was all dug up. (fn. 168)
All members of the Stonor family, except heads
of the family, are still buried in the churchyard.
In 1854 the Revd. C. E. Ruck-Keene rebuilt the
church at his own cost. It was enlarged to seat 150
instead of 100. (fn. 169) It is in the Early English and
Decorated styles and parts of the outer walls are all
that remain of the medieval church.
A faculty to install electric light in memory of the
vicar G. M. J. Hall was obtained in 1948. (fn. 170) Memorial inscriptions include those on the floor of the
Stonor aisle to Simon Doe (d. 1659), Mathew
Haskey (d. 1752) and his wife Mary (d. 1760), and
Matthias Haskey (d. 1797). On the chancel floor are
stone slabs to John Jerningham, son of Sir George
Jerningham, Bt., who died at Stonor in 1757; Dom
Mathias Molineux (d. 1759/60); Frances Cary (d.
1808), daughter of Thomas Stonor and widow of
George Cary, Esq., of Torr Abbey, Devon; (fn. 171) and
Father J. B. Mortoire (d. 1830). The last was Roman
Catholic chaplain of Stonor for 30 years and his
gravestone was moved from the churchyard to the
chancel. (fn. 172) Most of the other memorials mentioned
are also to Roman Catholics.
There are brass tablets to two vicars, C. E. RuckKeene (1792–1880), and G. M. J. Hall (d. 1946),
and another to William Rockall (d. 1948). The
memorial windows in the chancel are to the
memory of Mary Bell (d. 1871), Harry Davidson
(d. 1871), and the one in the Stonor aisle is to Anne
Hall (d. 1925), wife of the vicar, in remembrance of
37 years of devoted work for the church.
There is a war memorial to the dead of the two
World Wars, and the organ by Willis of London
was restored by Lieut. Philip J. Hall in 1919 as a
thanksgiving for his preservation.
In 1552 there were two small bells; there is now
one bell cast by Messrs. J. Warner of London and
erected in 1911. (fn. 173)
The silver chalice owned by the church in 1552
has gone, and the present 19th-century chalice and
large paten were given to the church in 1815 by the
vicar Thomas Leigh Bennett. (fn. 174)
There are fragmentary remains of an old register
(1763–83). Thereafter the registers for baptisms and
burials date from 1783 and for marriages from 1784. (fn. 175)
There are transcripts from 1666, but they have many
gaps. (fn. 176)
Roman Catholicism.
For this subject see the
appropriate section in Pyrton parish.
Protestant Nonconformity.
After the
Restoration there were three families, probably Protestant despite the influence of the Roman Catholic
family of Stonor, which persistently refused to
attend the parish church. (fn. 177) Six nonconformists are
recorded in 1676: (fn. 178) it is not known to which sect they
belonged. Nonconformity continued to thrive in the
village and this was no doubt owing to the incumbents' neglect. (fn. 179) In 1799, a licence was granted
for a meeting-house in 'Maiden's Grove', (fn. 180) and in
1823 another licence was conceded for a Wesleyan
meeting in the same hamlet. (fn. 181) A Wesleyan-Methodist chapel was built at Russell's Water in 1836. It
could seat 54 members. Twenty-seven were recorded
in 1851 as attending both in the afternoon and evening. (fn. 182) In 1958 the chapel had a membership of 5, (fn. 183)
and was served by a minister on the ThameWatlington circuit. (fn. 184)
Schools.
At the beginning of the 19th century
there was no school of any kind at Pishill. Some
children went to Assendon where there was a school
kept by a member of the established Church and a
Roman Catholic charity school, where Protestant
children were also admitted. (fn. 185)
In 1818 the poorer classes were said to be in want
of sufficient means of education and to be anxious to
possess them. A Sunday school had been established
in the village in which 21 children were taught, the
number rising to 24 in 1833, but there was no day
school at Pishill until a National school was opened
in 1854. It was held in a cottage on to which an
extra schoolroom was built in 1855. (fn. 186) The Revd.
C. E. Ruck-Keene, patron of the living of Pishill,
observed in 1853 that he had not been able to get a
schoolroom through fear of offending the Roman
Catholic Lord Camoys; that the whole of the Protestant population was being trained as Romanists at
the Roman Catholic school, there being no other
school within three miles; and that more than half
the 64 papists in the parish had become so in the last
twelve years. Ruck-Keene had obtained a ten-year
lease of part of the only ½-acre of land in the village
which did not belong to Lord Camoys, and said that
he was hoping that Christ Church would help in
the building of a schoolroom and that he was then
looking for a school-mistress. (fn. 187)
Besides the day school, the vicar reported in 1878
that a night school was held twice a week during the
five winter months and that he himself gave 'cottage
lectures' in outlying parts of the parish. (fn. 188) The
numbers at the National school, where there was
accommodation for 60, had increased from 30 in
1867 to 45 in 1887. (fn. 189) After this date the attendance
figures dropped from 25 in 1902 to 7 in 1938 and the
school was closed in 1939. (fn. 190) Since then the children
of Pishill have gone to school at Stonor (i.e. the former
Assendon). (fn. 191)
Charities.
By 1718 Henry Kebble, of South End
in Turvill, had settled in trust £5 for the poor. (fn. 192) It
appears that by the late 18th or early 19th century
the capital was represented by £25 stock, but that
distribution of the income had been suspended.
T. L. Bennett, on becoming vicar in 1814, recovered
the arrears and added them to the capital which thus
mounted to £33 6s. 8d. Distribution was resumed at
Christmas 1821, in the form of doles to the poor,
whether relieved or not. (fn. 193) The capital had increased
to £58 12s. 7d. by 1870 (fn. 194) and so remains. (fn. 195) In 1883
vouchers of 2s. to 4s. value, amounting to £3, were
distributed. (fn. 196) The charity was regulated by a Scheme
of 1951 which provided for gifts to the poor of the
'ancient' parish of clothes, blankets, fuel, or food, or
temporary assistance in cases of emergency. (fn. 197) It was
not distributed in 1956. (fn. 198)
Mrs. Catherine Phillips, by will proved 1850, left
£100 for the purchase of stock, the proceeds to be
distributed at Christmas to poor persons chosen by
the rector. (fn. 199) In 1951 the charity was regulated by the
same Scheme as Kebble's charity. (fn. 200) In 1956 £9 of the
accumulated balance was distributed in coal to the
aged. (fn. 201)